SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — San Franciscans bared an unusual amount of skin for this time of year Tuesday, as a city better known for its chilly summers, drizzle and fog experienced its hottest March in at least two decades, part of a rare winter heat wave baking the U.S. West.
While the Bay Area flirts with nearly 90 degree (32.2 C) highs, Phoenix is expected to top 100 F (37.7 C) this week — something it usually does in early May and has never done before March 26. Las Vegas could see its hottest March stretch ever recorded. Records were also falling in Los Angeles and across Southern California.
It’s a stark contrast to the Midwest and eastern half of the country, which are digging out after powerful snow storms that led to thousands of flight cancellations this week.
Dogs and sunbathers flocked to Crissy Field’s shoreline on the north end of San Francisco, as the Golden Gate Bridge shimmered nearby. It’s unusual for San Francisco to get this hot this early, said Roger Gass, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in the Bay Area.
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It last happened in 2005, when downtown hit a record 87 F (30.5 C) on March 11, part of a two-day heat wave and its record high for the month. In March 2004, the city saw a nearly weeklong heat wave with temperatures around 80 F (26.7 C).
On Tuesday temperatures in the city looked to tie the record.
“It feels like summer already in March. That’s crazy, but I love it,” said dog walker Justyce Roliz.
But resident Jessica Ling noted one challenge for San Franciscans: Most don’t have air conditioning.
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“We have our fans going, our windows open, but we try to be outside as much as we can,” she said.
Some tourists are enjoying the warm weather
Elsewhere, cities that are more accustomed to sweltering weather were hitting their own unusually high spring temps. In Las Vegas, there’s a chance temperatures could reach 100 F (37.7 C) Saturday, said meteorologist Brian Planz at the city’s National Weather Service forecast office. That would be the earliest Las Vegas has reached triple digits. Even if temps stay in the double digits, the city is poised to break its March all-time high of 93 F (33.8 C), set back in 2022, he said.
“If people are visiting Vegas this weekend, they just need to prepare for the heat, make sure they’re hydrating,” he said. “This is going to be unusual for this time of year.”
Mark Reeves was heeding the advice, drinking plenty of water, staying in the shade and occasionally dipping into the many air-conditioned casinos. The visitor from New Zealand, who was standing in front of the famous Fountains of Bellagio, said he didn’t think it would be this hot.
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But the heat hasn’t dampened his trip.
“For me, this is the trip of a lifetime,” he said. “I’ve never been to the USA before and I may never get here again.”
Johnnie and Darien Anderson were happy to exchange the cold weather in Little Rock, Arkansas, for the dry heat in Las Vegas to celebrate their wedding anniversary. They noted it is less humid than Arkansas in the summer.
Meanwhile, some Western national parks that were preparing for spring break crowds urged people to check the forecast before heading out. High temperatures at White Sands National Park in New Mexico could reach the mid 90s F (around 35 C). Grand Canyon National Park in Arizona was under an extreme heat warning, with temperatures possibly hitting 104 F (40 C) in some places. The message from park officials: Avoid strenuous hiking during the hottest part of the day, which they identify as 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
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Some cities warn against water waste
Denver hasn’t seen three consecutive March days above 80 F (26.6 Celsius) since 1907, but it could happen again this week, the National Weather Service said.
The heat wave comes at the end of an unusually warm winter that has led to a lack of snow in Colorado’s mountains, which provides the water for millions of people. Water providers in the Denver area have already enacted or are considering limits on the number of days people can water their lawns. They’re urging people not to be tempted to turn on their sprinklers this month.
Shonnie Cline, a spokesperson for Aurora Water, which provides water to 400,000 people in suburban Denver, said it’s possible temperatures could still drop below freezing later, causing any water left in sprinkler systems to freeze and break the lines.
“The sooner you wake it up, it’s not necessarily better,” she said of lawns.
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Associated Press journalists Jessica Hill in Las Vegas, Colleen Slevin in Denver and Susan Montoya Bryan in Albuquerque, New Mexico, contributed to this report.
HONG KONG (AP) — About 90 ships including oil tankers have crossed the Strait of Hormuz since the outset of the war with Iran and it is still exporting millions of barrels of oil at a time when the waterway has been effectively closed, according to maritime and trade data platforms.
Many of the vessels that passed through the strait were so-called “dark” transits evading Western government sanctions and oversight that likely have ties to Iran, maritime data firm Lloyd’s List Intelligence said. More recently, vessels with ties to India and Pakistan have also successfully crossed the strait as governments stepped up negotiations.
As crude prices spiked above $100 a barrel, U.S. President Donald Trump pressured allies and trade partners to send warships and reopen the strait, hoping to bring oil prices lower.
Most shipping traffic through the Strait of Hormuz, a waterway for global oil and gas transport that supplies roughly one-fifth of the world’s crude oil, has been halted since early March, after the war started. About 20 vessels have been attacked in the area.
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However, Iran has still managed to export well above 16 million barrels of oil since the beginning of March, trade data and analytics platform Kpler estimated. Due to Western sanctions and associated risks, China has been the biggest buyer of Iranian oil.
There has been ”continued resilience” in Iran’s oil export volumes, said Kpler trade risk analyst Ana Subasic.
Iran has managed to profit from oil sales and also “preserve its own export artery” by using control over the chokepoint, said Kun Cao, client director at consulting firm Reddal.
Iran’s oil export data estimates are largely aligned with maritime traffic data.
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At least 89 ships crossed the Strait of Hormuz between March 1 and 15 – including 16 oil tankers, according to Lloyd’s List Intelligence, down from roughly 100 to 135 vessel passages per day before the war. More than one-fifth of the 89 vessels were believed to be Iran-affiliated, while Chinese and Greece affiliated ships are among the rest, it said.
Other vessels also have been getting through.
The Pakistan-flagged crude oil tanker Karachi, controlled by the Pakistan National Shipping Corp., passed through the strait on Sunday, Lloyd’s List Intelligence said.
Shariq Amin, a spokesman at the Pakistan Port Trust, refused to confirm or deny which route the MT Karachi had used but he said the ship would soon safely reach Pakistan.
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The India-flagged liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) carriers Shivalik and Nanda Devi, both owned by state-owned Shipping Corp. of India, also traveled through the strait around March 13 or 14, according to Lloyd’s List Intelligence. LPG is used as a primary cooking fuel by millions of Indian households.
India’s foreign minister, Subrahmanyam Jaishankar, told the Financial Times the two vessels’ were able to pass following talks with Iran. Iraq was also in talks with Iran to allow Iraqi oil tankers through the Strait of Hormuz, its state-run news agency reported.
Vessels may be transiting “with at least some level of diplomatic intervention,” said Richard Meade, editor-in-chief of Lloyd’s List. So, Iran may have “effectively created a safe corridor” with some ships passing close to the Iranian coast.
Some vessels near or in the strait were found to have declared themselves as China-linked or with all Chinese crew to reduce risks of being attacked, based on an earlier analysis on ship tracking platform MarineTraffic. Analysts believe they were taking advantage of China’s closer ties with Iran.
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Oil prices have jumped more than 40% to above $100 per barrel since the Iran war began, and Iran has threatened it won’t allow “even a single liter of oil” destined for the U.S., and Israel and their allies to pass through.
To try to stabilize oil prices, the U.S. said it was allowing Iranian oil tankers to cross the strait. “The Iranian ships have been getting out already, and we’ve let that happen to supply the rest of the world,” Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said in an interview with CNBC on Monday.
The U.S. bombed military sites on Kharg Island off the Iranian coast, which is key for Iran’s oil network and exports, but President Donald Trump said he had left its oil infrastructure alone for now.
The latest passages through the Strait of Hormuz show the strait was not simply “closed,” Cao said. “It is better understood as closed selectively against some traffic, while still functioning for Iranian exports and a narrow set of tolerated non-Iranian movements,” he said.
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However, if Iran’s plan is to “inflict pain through higher energy prices, the number of tankers it allows through the Strait of Hormuz may be very limited,” Dutch bank ING’s strategists Warren Patterson and Ewa Manthey wrote in a research note.
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Saaliq reported from New Delhi. AP Writer Munir Ahmed contributed from Islamabad, Pakistan.
A toddler dubbed the ‘Nostradamus baby’ has made chilling predictions in a viral TikTok video, including claims about simulation theory and a catastrophic tsunami called ‘The Flood 2.0’.
Emilia Randall GAU Writer
05:00, 18 Mar 2026
The ‘Nostradamus Baby’, a toddler who has provided some eerie insights into what lies ahead for the remainder of 2026, looks to take the crown from French mystic Nostradamus.
A clip reshared by NebruhTV on TikTok features a toddler being questioned about what he had just been saying. The youngster delivers some bone-chilling forecasts.
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The boy stated: “I’m horrified.” He then launches into a disturbing explanation of a simulation conspiracy theory.
He stated: “I just don’t know that everybody living here thinks the earth is real. But it’s not actually real, because some scientists found out… there’s a glitch.”, reports the Mirror.
His mother asks: “So what is our life then?” He responds: “I don’t know. Maybe it’s just a computer… like a simulation. I feel like it’s a scientist testing little tiny people.
“They really thought reality was real down here… but little people like us aren’t actually real.”
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The original Nostradamus was a 16th-century seer who predicted countless disturbing events yet to unfold. He composed his predictions in mysterious quatrains, which revealed the destiny of global happenings.
Many featured in his 1555 work ‘The Prophecies’, which included no fewer than 942 quatrains.
Yet, the Nostradamus baby communicates much more directly.
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The other catastrophe he foresees is a massive flood. He stated: “There’s gonna be a tsunami… like 800 meters in the air. They call it The Flood 2.0. There’s gonna be sharks… great white sharks… when the flood comes.”
This bears similarity to Nostradamus forecasting Switzerland being drenched in blood.
Many have suggested this could be alluding to a flood.
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This prophecy is particularly chilling – and can be connected to a specific location in the modern world. His foreboding verse reads: “Because of the favour that the city will show… the Ticino will overflow with blood…” Switzerland’s scenic Italian-speaking canton is facing a grim and bloody future.
The bloodshed could signal a major disaster, a plague ravaging the area, or some form of natural calamity. Sceptics point out that Nostradamus wrote his works in Middle French, deliberately employing vague Latin terminology.
Among Nostradamus’ more peculiar predictions, one passage reads: “The great swarm of bees will arise by the night ambush”. Some reckon this could come to pass next year as the passage aligns with the number 26.
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However, it’s still uncertain what the bees might represent, as it appears unlikely that an enormous bee swarm could cause real damage through “ambush”.
A famous figure struck by lightning In the 26th verse of Century I, Nostradamus darkly foretells “the great man will be struck down in the day by a thunderbolt”. This important figure could span from royalty and world leaders to a prominent celebrity.
However, what remains certain is that this individual will be struck down by a bolt of lightning in broad daylight. Could we potentially witness a lightning strike at a red carpet event in 2026?
This fairytale run to the knockouts will have felt unlikely for Bodo/Glimt after failing to win their first six league phase games, meaning they were left needing results against Manchester City and Atletico to qualify for the play-offs.
And, against the odds, they provided them.
A 3-1 victory over Pep Guardiola’s men brought deserved attention and acclaim, but it was no one-off as Bodo overcame Atleti 2-1 in Madrid to claim a play-off spot.
Knutsen’s side lost to Spurs in the Europa League semi-finals last season, having become the first Norwegian side to reach the last four of a major European competition.
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Key to their success has often been their ability to make their home games as tough as possible.
In the north of Norway, Bodo can often be bitterly cold, snowy and windy during the long winter months, with temperatures deep into minus figures.
The difficult weather conditions mean the team play on an artificial pitch made of plastic, something many sides used to playing on grass find difficult to deal with.
Those aspects, coupled with the players’ determination and strong belief in their ability, means many have left Bodo defeated.
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They thrashed Jose Mourinho’s Roma 6-1 at home in the Conference League five years ago, while Celtic, Besiktas, Porto and Lazio have also been victims in recent years.
Bodo exit the Champions League having won their past three home games – seeing off Manchester City, Inter Milan and Sporting – and will look to their home record to serve them well once more when they next play European football.
Those experiments seek to answer some of the biggest questions in science. These include learning how the Universe began and how it will end, finding the first ever signs of life on planets orbiting distant stars, detecting black holes that ripple space time, mapping newborn planets around distant stars and analysing their atmospheres for signs of life. All of these are experiments in which, historically, the UK played a leading role. But now, British scientists could be largely locked out of them in the future, if the STFC does not pay its way.
A new trade pact between Indonesia and the United States has recast their economic ties, binding Jakarta’s resource wealth and energy future more closely to Washington’s strategic needs.
Indonesia agreed to widen access for U.S. investors in critical minerals, boost its purchases of U.S. crude and liquefied petroleum gas, back the development of an American coal export corridor and cooperate on small modular nuclear reactors.
In turn, the U.S. trimmed a threatened 32% tariff on Indonesian goods to 19% and granted broader access to the American market, including a zero-tariff entry policy for major products such as palm oil, coffee, cocoa, spices and rubber.
Though the U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling against President Donald Trump‘s tariffs may impact how it is implemented. The deal fits with longer term U.S. efforts to secure critical mineral supply chains, beef up its oil and gas exports and reduce dependence on China.
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Meanwhile other export-reliant Southeast Asian economies negotiating with the United States, including Vietnam, are closely watching the Indonesia–U. S. trade deal for clues about the tariff levels and concessions Washington may demand across the region.
Indonesia, the world’s largest nickel producer, has vast mineral reserves needed for electric vehicles and clean energy systems. It’s caught between the conflicting aims of the U.S. and China, a key source of foreign investment and market for Indonesian coal and nickel, analysts say.
China is concentrating on electrification, renewables and dominance of battery supply chains, while the U.S. is pairing its push for mineral access with more fossil fuel exports.
Haryo Limanseto of Indonesia’s Coordinating Ministry for Economic Affairs, said the deal’s energy provisions “balance foreign trade and meet domestic energy needs.”
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“The leadership of Indonesia is trying to tread a fine line between the West and China,” said Putra Adhiguna of the Jakarta-based Energy Shift Institute, adding that Chinese influence is “inescapable” since it is Indonesia’s largest trading partner.
US gains a new foothold to Indonesia’s minerals
Indonesia has pledged to promote U.S. investment across its mineral industry, from exploration and mining to refining, transport and export. In some cases, American investors will receive treatment “no less favorable” than domestic firms.
Restrictions on exports of critical minerals to the U.S. will be relaxed to expedite development of Indonesia’s rare earths and critical minerals sector with U.S. partners, promising “greater certainty” for companies involved in extraction to help boost production, the agreement says.
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Major policy shifts have altered Indonesia’s mining sector in the past six months and the trade deal’s new restrictions on existing foreign-owned entities in Indonesia will curb excess output from processing plants. Foreign businesses must follow the same tax, environmental, labor and quota rules as other companies.
Indonesia’s critical mineral processing sector is currently dominated by China, which has firms operating or financing multiple nickel smelters and industrial parks.
“Indonesia is absolutely central to this competition because it combines resource endowment with political ambition,” said Kevin Zongzhe Li, with the Center for China Analysis within the Asia Society Policy Institute, a New York-based think tank.
Competition over critical minerals is heating up and the agreement “opens the door for U.S. firms to have a real shot” at “modestly leveling a sector where Chinese industries established first mover advantage,” he said.
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Indonesia to purchase more US energy
Indonesia has agreed to cut red tape so that its companies can more easily purchase U.S. energy products.
It plans to buy $15 billion worth of American energy commodities over an unspecified period, mainly fossil fuels such as liquefied petroleum gas, crude oil and gasoline.
Trump’s efforts to persuade Asian countries to buy more American LNG has gained momentum during trade talks, with energy purchases emerging as a way to narrow trade gaps. It’s unclear if the turmoil in oil trading due to the war with Iran might impact that effort.
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Indonesia, one of the world’s top coal exporters, will also invest in developing an export corridor from the U.S. West Coast to help make American coal more competitive in global markets, the agreement says.
Indonesia also pledged to work with the U.S. and Japan to deploy small modular nuclear reactors, starting with a potential project in West Kalimantan.
Shift in energy transition policies
The deal reflects changed U.S. energy priorities under the Trump administration, away from cooperation on reducing Indonesia’s climate change -causing emissions.
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In 2022, Indonesia joined the Just Energy Transition Partnership, a multi-billion deal where the U.S. and other wealthy nations pledged support for reducing coal use and expanding clean energy. The program was faltering even before Trump withdrew from it last year.
Despite the U.S. withdrawal, Indonesian officials said the $21.4 billion partnership will continue. As of January, at least $3.4 billion, around 15%, of the funds had been received, according to Airlangga Hartarto, Indonesia’s minister for economic affairs.
Adhiguna said the deal’s biggest impact may be political, with Jakarta emulating the U.S. emphasis on fossil fuel use.
“There is the risk that the political leadership of Indonesia is going to fall back into that hole,” Adhiguna said.
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That will mean still slower progress in areas like solar energy.
Over the past five years, tropical, sunny Indonesia has installed less than 1 gigawatt of solar energy — compared with roughly 2 GW in Vietnam and nearly 60 GW in India. The International Energy Agency found that fossil fuels, like coal, oil and natural gas, made up nearly 78% of Indonesia’s energy mix in 2023.
Indonesia should prioritize building 100 GW of solar and storage capacity and expand interconnection grids to enable renewable energy sharing, said Dinita Setyawati, with the United Kingdom-registered energy think tank Ember.
Tariff strike down creates confusion
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The deal’s future has been clouded by the U.S. Supreme Court’s recent ruling against Trump’s sweeping global tariffs, just after the agreement was reached — casting doubt on the durability of his trade strategy. The agreement requires ratification by Indonesia’s parliament before it can take effect.
That adds another “layer of uncertainty,” said Meha Sitepu, with the Washington-based strategic advisory firm The Asia Group.
Some provisions of the agreement are drawing criticism, including those that are seen as diluting Indonesia’s halal certification requirements in the mostly Muslim country of nearly 288 million, Southeast Asia’s most populous nation.
“Parliamentary approval could be an uphill battle and added uncertainty from the U.S. side may complicate things further,” Sitepu said.
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Delgado reported from Bangkok, Thailand. Associated Press writer Edna Tarigan in Jakarta contributed to this report.
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A cardiologist has warned about three worst foods with high cholesterol – with one popular breakfast item described as a ‘cholesterol bomb’
Christopher Sharp Trendswatch Reporter
04:00, 18 Mar 2026
A leading cardiologist has identified the three worst foods for people aiming to lower their cholesterol levels, with one item labelled a “cholesterol bomb”.
Dr Steven Lome, a cardiologist at Rush Copley in Aurora, Illinois, made the revelations during an appearance on the Physicians Committee podcast, where he outlined the most problematic foods for cholesterol management.
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Before examining these foods, it’s worth understanding that cholesterol comes in two primary forms: HDL and LDL. HDL cholesterol is considered ‘good’ cholesterol as it can lower the chances of developing heart disease or suffering a stroke.
LDL cholesterol, conversely, is regarded as bad cholesterol, as excessive amounts can cause arterial blockages and heighten heart disease risk.Consequently, maintaining elevated HDL cholesterol levels whilst keeping LDL cholesterol low is crucial.
When discussing the three principal foods to steer clear of, Dr Lome highlighted processed meats, red meats, and eggs as the primary culprits. He explained: “Processed meats, pepperoni, baloney, salami, sausage, things like that, they’re extremely high in saturated fat and, most of the time most, saturated fat has the biggest impact and they are high in saturated fat.
“They also have a good amount of dietary cholesterol which we need to remember, dietary cholesterol is not an essential nutrient. Processed meats I think by far would be the worst.
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“Next, I would put red meats which still would be high in cholesterol and saturated fat significantly so you really want to get rid of those. And then eggs.”
Dr Steven delivered a particularly striking assessment when discussing eggs, stating: “Eggs are a cholesterol bomb, I hear people call them. That yolk is just so full of cholesterol. In most surveys, eggs are the number one source of dietary cholesterol in the American diet.”
The relationship between diet and cholesterol levels extends beyond mere speculation, with numerous studies examining how various foods affect overall health.
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Eggs
Multiple research papers have explored the connection between egg consumption and cholesterol levels. One investigation published in the Science Direct journal examined the effect of eggs on blood lipid profiles and whether they warrant inclusion in our diets.
The researchers found: “When combined with healthy eating patterns that include more dietary fibre or fish, eggs may be beneficially associated with lipid outcomes. Overall, these results provide no evidence that egg intake should be limited when consumed as a part of a fibre-rich, heart- healthy diet.”
Meanwhile, separate research indicated that eggs might contribute to elevated LDL cholesterol levels. Published in the Nutrients journal, researchers concluded: “Notably, longer-term high egg-consumption may lead to higher LDL-c/HDL-c ratio and LDL-c. However, RCTs with long tern follow-up are needed to guarantee the association between egg consumption and human health.”
Red and Processed Meat
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Both red and processed meat have been associated with a heightened risk of heart disease according to research published by the University of Oxford. Publishing their study in the Critical reviews in Food Science and Nutrition journal they found that higher intakes of red and processed meat could increase the risk of heart disease.
In a statement following the publication of the findings, co-lead author of the study Dr Keren Papier said: “Red and processed meat have been consistently linked with bowel cancer and our findings suggest an additional role in heart disease.
“Therefore, current recommendations to limit red and processed meat consumption may also assist with the prevention of coronary heart disease.”
For more information on how to reduce your cholesterol, visit the NHS website.
The human cost of Israel and America’s air campaign on Iran is mounting, nowhere more painfully felt than in the children’s wards of its hospitals.
In the intensive care unit of one, four-year-old Anita lies in a coma with severe head injuries a few days after being pulled out of the rubble of her home when it was destroyed in an airstrike.
Her mother Zeiba was in torment, clutching her tiny hand and begging her to wake up. Doctors say she almost certainly never will.
Image: Zeiba holds the hand of four-year-old Anita
Later, I asked her if she had a message for Donald Trump about this war.
“Why did this happen to us?” she said, pausing to let out her tears.
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“To innocent people, my innocent four-year-old girl, who was only going downstairs to come to me, why do it to ordinary people like us?
“We were sitting together at home, they have taken away our safety, our happiness, and the health of our children.”
Anita had been playing with her 14-year-old brother and was coming down the stairs, answering their mother’s call, when the missile came in.
Image: Anita’s 14-year-old brother
It was terrifying, he told us: “Suddenly, everywhere went black. I didn’t understand what happened next. I didn’t hear a sound, nothing… I thought I was dreaming.”
Israel and America are calling their airstrikes precision-targeted. The term often loses most of its meaning when you see the impact on the ground.
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Civilians are being hurt in the air campaign here because some airstrikes are being used on targets in residential areas. That is abundantly clear in places like Resalat in eastern Tehran.
Here, missiles have devastated a huge area the size of a city block. There was a Basij or paramilitary security force base here, say residents, but civilian apartments too, many of them.
We could see the impact of several direct hits on two apartment blocks. We met Seyed Hossein Sane, whose daughter had been at home when the missiles struck mid-afternoon. He’d been at work.
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35-year-old Seyedeh Farideh’s body was pulled out of the rubble and identified three days later.
Seyed had this message for the leader of whichever country sent the missiles: “I wish the same thing would happen to them that they would have to identify the body of their youth with their own hands. Them and their families.
“Same as what I did to the body of my daughter after three days, I wish that for whoever caused this.”
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Image: Seyed Hossein Sane, whose daughter was at home when missiles struck
Israelis and Americans say their airstrikes are the best way of achieving their war aims, regime change among them.
But the longer they go on, the greater the human cost and anguish.
The Prince of Wales is believed to be increasingly taking the lead in royal family decisions, including those involving Prince Andrew
Bradley Jolly Overnight News Editor
13:00, 17 Mar 2026
Prince William is reportedly “calling more of the shots” within the royal family. The Prince of Wales is thought to be increasingly taking the helm in decision-making, including matters concerning his disgraced uncle Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, who was forced to leave Royal Lodge this year.
Andrew, who denies any wrongdoing, saw his daughters Princess Beatrice and Princess Eugenie barred from Royal Ascot this week. It’s understood that William, 43, had a hand in this decision, which allegedly left the princesses “completely blindsided”.
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Royal expert Andrew Lownie stated today: “William, I think, is calling more of the shots now. So there’s definitely a change going on, and I get the sense also that there’s a bit of distancing even from the Sussexes, clearly from the Waleses.” Speaking on his podcast, The Lownie Report, he suggested that William is eager to see a significant shift in public perception of the monarchy, reports the Mirror.
Among the sisters, Beatrice has reportedly found the decision to exclude them from Royal Ascot most difficult. The siblings have maintained a low public profile since their father’s arrest on February 19 at his residence on the private Sandringham Estate.
Mr Lownie added: “I think the decision to ban them from Ascot is interesting. The line that they’re [Beatrice and Eugenie] pushing is that they were never going to go to Ascot in the first place, and it does seem odd to be so public about this distancing.”
Both Beatrice and Eugenie hold the titles of princess and HRH, and it has been revealed that both are permitted to rent homes in esteemed royal palaces. However, royal expert Jennie Bond suggests it might be time for Beatrice and Eugenie, who are not working royals, to relinquish their royal titles in their personal and professional lives.
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“I don’t think either of them has ever flaunted their titles, but there’s obviously a huge cachet in some circles about being called a Princess,” she said. “A title like that opens doors and sets up connections, which both Beatrice and Eugenie have used to their advantage. There’s nothing wrong in that, but now that their father has been stripped of his titles and their mother can no longer use hers, they might like to quietly drop the use of theirs.”
In October last year, it was reported that father-of-three William was firmly “calling the shots” to shield King Charles from “criticism” over his hesitation to act against his disgraced brother. Andrew, however, has consistently denied any wrongdoing.
Dr Anna Muir, a dog behaviourist who runs a training centre near Mold, Flintshire, also welcomed the changes, saying: “For irresponsible dog owners who let their dogs run loose under no control, who let them off lead in sheep fields, who show no effort to reduce them chasing livestock – I am absolutely supportive of unlimited fines.”
Claire Danvers complained of fatigue as early as 2024 but brushed it off along with other symptoms thinking she was just busy
Mum thought cancer was being busy
A mum who blamed needing a power nap before the school run on being a busy mum was devastated when doctors uncovered 13 tumours in her breast. Claire Danvers says she first became aware of her symptoms, which included severe back pain, fatigue, and nausea, at the start of 2024.
Claire says the fatigue became so extreme that her ‘eyes would feel heavy’ after lunchtime and her body would ‘physically hurt’. The 39-year-old says she would find herself needing to take a nap before picking her children up from school – but put the tiredness down to being a busy, self-employed mum.
Claire, who was taking painkillers every day because her back pain was so severe, says that her symptoms were initially put down to her suffering from endometriosis. But after discovering a lump in her right breast in February 2025, Claire was prompted to visit her GP in April 2025.
Doctors referred Claire for a biopsy and at the end of May 2025 she received the devastating news that she had breast cancer – after doctors discovered 13 tumours in her right breast. Claire says she was ‘traumatised’ by the news and has since undergone a mastectomy as well as chemotherapy and radiotherapy treatment.
The network marketer says the fear of leaving her children behind is ‘horrendous’ and is encouraging other women who experience breast cancer symptoms to ‘advocate for themselves’. Claire, from Poole, Dorset, said: “I was suffering with extreme back pain. I was taking paracetamol and ibuprofen every day for the aches and pains that I was having.
“I was experiencing extreme fatigue – I was tired all the time. I would get to after lunch time and my eyes would feel so heavy and my body would actually hurt. I would want to go to sleep but then I was putting it down to having two kids and having a very stressful business because I’m self-employed.
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“I was putting all of my symptoms down, explaining them away with how my life was. There were definitely some days that I would recline in my chair and close my eyes for a little bit. I just put it down to the fact that I was going through a lot of stress at the time.”
Claire visited her GP in April 2025 after discovering a lump in her right breast two months earlier. She said: “In December 2024 I had a lump come up in my armpit. I was explaining stuff away – I was like I’ve been unwell, it’s just a raised lymph node and then that disappeared in 10 days.
“When I found the lump in my breast in February 2025 yet again I thought that’s not normal, that doesn’t feel right, but I had a lump in my armpit and that went away. I unfortunately left it until April and it was only because my husband was constantly badgering me to go to the doctors and actually get it checked out that I did.
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“The doctor examined me and said that straight away she was referring me for the two-week rapid referral pathway for breast cancer.” Claire underwent a biopsy on May 2nd 2025 and received the devastating news that she had invasive lobular carcinoma, a type of breast cancer, later that month.
Claire said: “By the time I actually found it, my cancer as a whole had grown to 9.7cm and I had 13 tumours in my breast. I was traumatised [when I was diagnosed]. The hardest thing I’ve ever had to do is tell my family and my two kids.
“Cancer diagnosis is traumatic enough but there’s also guilt you feel as a parent, especially having young children. My children have only just turned six and eight. The fear of leaving them behind – that guilt is horrendous.”
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Claire underwent a mastectomy with reconstruction on her right breast in June 2025 and has since undergone four months of chemotherapy treatment and 15 sessions of radiotherapy. She said: “Everything is just very traumatic. You can’t take it in – it’s like your watching your life from the outside.”
She added: “It doesn’t feel like you’re going through it, it feels like you’re watching someone else go through it. I’ve literally just finished my chemotherapy and radiotherapy and now I’m having hormone therapy.
“Because the cancer is driven by my hormones, they have to shut your hormones off. My life has now been changed for the rest of my life.
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“I’m 39 years old, and I’ve been drop-kicked into menopause because they have to stop my hormones, to stop my cells turning into cancer. Once I’ve done all of that, as long as I can tolerate the next stage of hormone therapy, I will then eventually have a hysterectomy.”
Claire is now encouraging other people who notice that there is something wrong with their bodies to “advocate for themselves”. She said: “I think it was very easy for people – doctors or even myself – to look and say my symptoms were because of endometriosis.
“My advice would be to always advocate for yourself. If you have that gut feeling that something isn’t right and even if you don’t know what it is, push through it and keep pursuing it.”
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